Summer Of The Mariposas PDF

Summer Of The Mariposas PDF

Embark on a captivating adventure with “Summer of the Mariposas” by Guadalupe Garcia McCall. Join Odilia and her sisters on a heroic quest to return a deceased man to his Mexican family. Discover how they navigate challenges, aided by supernatural forces, on a journey filled with courage and cleverness. This gripping tale, perfect for ages 12 and up, weaves Mexican folklore and family bonds into a 368-page masterpiece. Immerse yourself in this enchanting narrative, coming in October 2012…

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Summer
Mariposas
of the
1
Prologue
El Cazo: “Hazme caso o te caso con un sapo.
The Pot: “Listen to me or I will make you marry a toad.
—a play on the multiple meanings of the word caso
(pay attention and wed/marry)
A
lmost a year after our father left the house, never to
be heard from again, the long, miserable drought
ended in Texas. The heavy summer rains had more than en-
chanted everyone; the days that followed had brought forth
a most unexpected, spectacular surprise. To our delight, an
unusually large brood of American Snout butterflies swarmed
Eagle Pass by the billions.
Indiscriminate in taste, the mariposas flittered over culti-
vated gardens as happily as they danced over thorn-ridden lots
and neglected fields. To them, nothing was safe, nothing was
sacred.
Because they were everywhere, clinging to freshly scrubbed
laundry on clothes lines, or stuck to the bottom of well-heeled
shoes, the butterflies were on everyones most wanted list,
I
2
including Mamás. She hated sweeping their little corpses out
of her kitchen and off her porch, but she especially hated how
they followed her everywhere like a dark little cloud.
That same summer, Mamá stopped being a housewife. After
admitting to herself that Papá wasnt going to send any more
money, shed done the responsible thing and gone out and found
her very first job.
As for us, we tried staying indoors and playing Loteria like
Mamá instructed. It was difficult, however, because to play Loteria
we needed a caller, un cantor, and Papá had always been ours. A
good cantor can recite the traditional riddles for all fifty-four
cards in the Loteria by heart as he reveals each card to the players.
Riddles like “El caso que te hago es pocowere all right, but to
keep things interesting Papá had always altered the riddles and
personalized them to fit our family. Wed squirm and giggle with
joy and excitement every time a new riddle featured one of us.
One day, however, right before he left, Papá made up a particu-
larly ominous riddle.
“La Sirena, he called, holding up the card for The Mermaid.
La mujer who wants to take your Papá away! No! We wont let
her!”
My parents were like any other parents; they bickered and
made up all the time. But that day the riddle upset Maso
much that the fight it stirred up between them soured the game
for Papá. From then on, we played Loteria as a family with less
and less frequency. So it was no surprise that after he left, we lost
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